Results 201–220 of 2542 for speaker:Mr Andrew Faulds

Statement on the Defence Estimates (18 Oct 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Would the right hon. and learned Gentleman maintain that argument were he a citizen of Sarajevo?

Business of the House (22 Jul 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: May we have an assurance that the House will be recalled if the situation in the former Yugoslavia deteriorates to the extent that an internationally recognised country is finally erased with the immense suffering that that will entail for the Muslims, particularly in view of the fact that the Government have consistently misrepresented the view of the military both in Britain and at NATO...

Business of the House (22 Jul 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: It happens to be true.

Arts Council (Review) (21 Jul 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: The right hon. Gentleman failed to comment on the project "Arts through education". What are the implications of the review on "Arts through education", an immensely important project? Does he agree with me that the introduction of the national lottery into this whole area of arts funding is simply a means of getting the Government off the hook of their funding responsibilities, and will...

Points of Order (13 Jul 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order, Madam Speaker.

Points of Order (13 Jul 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Absolutely. Some of us who have been here even longer remember that in the old days there was absolutely no way in which a Standing Order No. 9—now a Standing Order No. 20—having been refused, could even have been raised within the House. I suggest, Madam Speaker, that you go back to the old practice.

Serious Fraud Office (30 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: What term is there to the pursuit of this projected trial, and when would this sub judice rule lapse? As regards the correspondence, why does the Attorney-General refer to "all parts of the House", when he knows perfectly well that no one on this side of the House put in any applications on behalf of Asil Nadir?

Personal Statement (29 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order, Madam Speaker. In the presence of the Attorney-General, is it not absolutely a requirement that he should now make a statement about this highly unsatisfactory matter?

Points of Order (23 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order, Madam Speaker. I should like to apologise to you and to the House for my temporary lapse a few moments ago, but it is aggravating to witness hilarity when one is discussing the sufferings in Bosnia.

European Council (Copenhagen) (23 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: As for safeguarding the future of Bosnia, we have nothing but words, words and words. Does the Prime Minister realise that he should be ashamed of himself, as should his Foreign Secretary and the supposed leaders of the European Community, for his total spinelessness and pusillanimity? [ Laughter.] Stupid bastards! They are laughing about this.

Orders of the Day — Opposition Day: Political Parties (Funding) (22 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Would not it be healthy, to put it at its simplest, if political parties were funded from taxation rather than from moneys provided by foreigners?

Business of the House (17 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Apparently there is some monkey business under way as regards the Museums and Galleries Commission. When can we have a statement as to what plots are afoot as regards this matter?

Oral Answers to Questions — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Bosnia (16 Jun 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: In any future conversations with this leading war criminal Milosevic, what will the right hon. Gentleman suggest as to the practicality of the restoration of the territorial integrity of Bosnia, which has clearly been abandoned in the Washington agreement to which he shamefully put his name and that of this country?

Bosnia (24 May 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Would that the Foreign Secretary were here so that I could tell him to his face that he should be ashamed of himself for having put his name, and Britain's name, to this absolutely atrocious Washington agreement which totally abandons the Bosnian Muslims. What minute prospect is there of the Bosnian Serbs being forced to abandon their conquests?

Oral Answers to Questions — Home Department: Car Crime (13 May 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Why can the car industry itself not make a greater contribution to the prevention of car crime?

Points of Order ( 5 May 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order, Madam Speaker. As to the Asil Nadir case, for those of us who know something about the history of Cyprus—that is to say, not many Members of this House—[Interruption.] You are all bloody ignorant about it.

Points of Order ( 5 May 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: I am an old man, and I occasionally get impatient at the stupidity of my colleagues on both sides of the House. Is it not a fact that, if the British Government had taken appropriate action when Archbishop Makarios aborted the constitution—[Interruption.] try to learn—of the Republic of Cyprus in 1963, and if the British Government had had the guts to take any action in 1974, when there...

Bosnia (29 Apr 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: I welcome the apparent conversion of the Chairman of the Select Committee on Foreign Affairs to a more realistic appraisal of the problems of Bosnia. I hope that more of his colleagues follow his conversion. There is a near-exact analogy for the inaction of the Front Bench of timorous Tories with the conduct of a not dissimilar bunch who sat there in the 1930s as the civil war in Spain...

Bosnia (19 Apr 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: Do none of the second-rate Ministers in this third-rate Administration realise that their spunklessness in backing the Vance-Owen plan, which is hopeless and now dead, and in pursuing the ineffectiveness of sanctions, which the Foreign Secretary is still bumbling on about, has led to the death of thousands upon thousands of Bosnian Muslims who have not had the weapons to defend themselves?...

Burnsall's, Smethwick (11 Mar 1993)

Mr Andrew Faulds: The Minister is rambling. Did he listen to a word of my speech? Is he trying to pretend that the conduct of the O'Neils was in any way satisfactory with a work force of about 30 Punjabi women who did not speak English, who had no knowledge of their rights and who had to get union recognition to protect them? Will he comment on that essential element in this case?


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